Photo: Devonport keeper Nathan Pitchford is deceived by Jack Petrie's free-kick [PlessPix]
(NPL Finals Series,
Valley Road, Devonport, Saturday, 8 September 2018)
Devonport City 2 (Steven Pace 29 og, Kieran
Mulraney 87)
Heidelberg United 3 (Sean Ellis 44, Alexander
Schiavo 45, Jack Petrie 90+7)
HT:
1-2 Att: 1,146 Ref: T Peart
Devonport City:
Pitchford - Bidwell, Lazcano, Mulraney, Smith - Jesse
Dance, Blizzard - Stone
- West, Mann, Holden (Subs:
Crocker, Jelenovic, Knott, Andrews, Pearce)
Heidelberg United:
Theodoridis-Petropoulos - Read, Pace, Byles, Way - Zahra,
Petrie -
Ellis, Schiavo, Cartanos - Cahill
(Subs: Wilkins, Hall, Tsalikidis,
Pavlidis, Ofli)
Heidelberg
United came to Valley Road with a great reputation as holders of the NPL title,
but Devonport City, the Tasmanian league and cup double winners, were not
overawed and generally gave as good as they got.
Tempers
became frayed at times, but Tasmania’s English referee, Tony Peart, showed his
experience from The Championship in England and refused to be intimidated. His decisions were authoritative, his
demeanour calm and collected, and it is not surprising that he may be gracing
the A-League later this year as an assistant referee.
The
Victorian visitors dominated the opening exchanges and Devonport were reliant
on the occasional counter-attack through long balls.
But,
Heidelberg’s shooting was way off target and they failed to punish the home
side, despite having most of the possession.
This
proved fateful as Devonport took the lead around the half-hour mark when a low
ball driven in from the left by Michael Holden was turned into his own net by a
lunging Steven Pace.
This had
the home supporters in raptures and Heidelberg knew that they were in for a
game.
The game
turned dramatically within a couple of minutes of half-time when Heidelberg
used their own swift counter-attacks to score twice, through Sean Ellis and
Alexander Schiavo. They managed to
breach the central defence of Devonport and beat Nathan Pitchford with low
shots from the edge of the box.
The
second half saw Devonport more involved, but some of their shooting was way off
target.
Pitchford
had very little to do as Heidelberg’s attacks lacked bite because of resolute
defending by the home side and aggressive midfield play by Beau Blizzard, Jesse
Dance and Joel Stone.
Devonport
were like a dog with a bone and their pressure was rewarded in the 87th
minute when a Stone free-kick was turned against the left-hand post by
Heidelberg keeper Christopher Theodoridis-Petropoulos and Kieran Mulraney
knocked the ball home from close range to make it 2-2.
Five
minutes of stoppage time were signalled by the fourth official and extra-time
seemed inevitable.
Six
minutes were gone when Heidelberg earned a free-kick wide on the left. Jack Petrie floated a high ball towards the
far post which was completely misjudged by Pitchford and, to his horror, the
ball dipped under the bar and in to the net to give Heidelberg a 3-2 win.
“Very
unlucky, wasn’t it,” said Devonport City coach, Chris Gallo.
“I think
it was the second-last kick of the game, or whatever it was. It’s an unfortunate result, but I think we’ve
held three very good Victorian teams. I
think we’ve held our own really well.
“That’s
the whole idea [to represent Tasmania]. We
knew that. We have to represent our
State [of Tasmania] and the people and the football community.
“We
can’t sit back and defend around the 18-yard box. We need to be proactive. It’s in our DNA and it’s who we are. That’s what we believe in and how we believe
our football should be played.”
Gallo
said that he has had informal approaches from interstate clubs after
Devonport’s highly successful season, including in the FFA Cup.
“I’ll
speak to the club again,” he said. “I’m
tremendously happy here. My family is
happy here.
“There
has been interest. I can’t deny it. By the same token , my group of players that I
have here, I’d run through brick walls
for them, and I think they’d do the same for me. It’s a great place to be a part of and we’ve
built a huge culture here that’s got high standards and I think, if we continue
nights like this in the future, it’ll be all worthwhile.
“We
nullified their attack really well. The
fact is in football that no team can handle pressure or be under pressure [the
entire game], but you’ve got to put them under there and be brave to do that
and I thought we did really well in pressing them.
“We
changed our press in the second half and had to set up little traps up in wide areas
which allowed us to capitalise on that. But, unfortunately, that took a toll on Kynan
[West] and Holden and that probably decreased our attack a little bit.
“It’s a
game we can learn from and improve from and there’s a lot of young players on
the national stage who did really well, and local players, as well, such as
Eddie Bidwell and Kynan West. So, I’m
very, very proud of them. We’ve got a
16-year-old as well, not pulling out and giving his all, so I was very, very
proud.”
Former
Tasmanian and South Hobart star, Kostas Kanakaris, was injured and unable to
play for Heidelberg, although he did make the trip and was present at the game.